Allies

Minions

Enemies

Likes

Power, money, business, success, financial leverage

Dislikes

Failing, his demands not being met, being ordered around

Fate

Bounces out of control due to Flubber and has to be rescued by firemen (The Absent-Minded Professor) Cries in court (Son Of Flubber) Gets chased away by Herbie and multiple VWs and then gets arrested (Herbie Rides Again)

Quote

"Relax? How can I relax, you fat-head?""Why, if you weren't deductible, I'd disown you!""Alonzo Hawk can be betrayed, but he is never defeated!""At the tender age of nineteen, I was the best known repossessor of cars west of the Mississippi. Hot-wire Hawk, they called me."

Here, he's also the main antagonist where he goes as a ruthless billionaire who makes a living destroying old buildings (some contains great history) to plan on building skyscrapers and shopping malls. He was going to destroy the Steinmetz Firehouse, home of Mrs. Steinmetz, the aunt of Tennessee Steinmetz, the mechanic of Herbie in The Love Bug, but got foiled by Herbie and many of his friends, including other Volkswagens. In this incarnation, he's renamed Alonzo A. Hawk, probably by mistake.

List of Hawk-inspired characters in other productions

John Slade

In the 1976 The Shaggy D.A., sequel to 1959The Shaggy Dog, Keenan Wynn portrays another ruthless billionnaire character, named John Slade, which is a lookalike of Hawk in both behavior and look. It remains unknown why Disney didn't simply reuse the name of Alonzo Hawk, as the name is the only difference between Slade and Hawk.

Other Hawk-inspired characters in Disney movies

Wikipedia also lists two other characters who aren't exactly Alonzo Hawk but seem to have been somehow inspired by him; the first being Martin Ridgeway from 1972 Snowball Express, another bad banker played by Keenan Wynn, but less dishonest than Hawk; and the second (and the only animated one) being J. J. Wagstaff from Fluppy Dogs.